The automotive world is full of foreign words. Italians, Germans, French and all the rest came up with stuff that had to be translated to English. Now, it only takes a little effort to learn the proper pronunciation, and since Top Gear won't help you with that, we will!

Here are the ten most difficult cases:

10.) Peugeot/Renault/Citroën

Oh, the bloody French! They always make it difficult, don't they? Anyway, it's not as bad as it seems. For example, I could tell you that Peugeot is Pözsó, but English speakers may find this more helpful:

9.) Huayra/Touareg/Tuatara

Ok, so you want your product to sound exotic. I guess that's understandable when you actually sell an exotic like the 'WHY-ra' or the SCC 'too-UH-tara', but what's up with that 'TWA-reg' bloated SUV from the Germans?

8.) Škoda

Eastern European car names don't exactly translate in the West. The most confusing is the Czech Škoda. The French-owned Romanian car Dacia isn't easy and neither is Zaporozhets. They called it Запоро́жець in Soviet Ukraine.

1.) Koenigsegg

It shouldn't be too difficult, right? You've got the first part, Koenig, which is the same as König in German. It means king. Than, you've got the segg part, which would be "zeg". Königzeg. But what happens when you ask for assistance? Disaster:

Welcome back to Answers of the Day - our daily Jalopnik feature where we take the best ten responses from the previous day's Question of the Day and shine it up to show off. It's by you and for you, the Jalopnik readers. Enjoy!